INVESTIGATION: ‘Devastating’ nuclear accident risks kept under wraps

By Bill Heaney

A ruling allowing the Ministry of Defence (MoD) to keep nuclear safety problems secret has been condemned as a threat to democracy, with “devastating” accident risks, according to an investigation published today by The Ferret.

Scottish journalism’s leading investigation bureau’s editor Rob Edwards reports that an information tribunal in London has rejected a bid to release reports about Trident nuclear bomb and submarine hazards on the Clyde because of fears about leaks to an increasingly “aggressive” Russia.

But the secrecy has come under fierce fire from a former nuclear submarine commander and campaigners. They criticised the MoD for hiding its nuclear blunders, putting people in danger, and edging the UK towards a “closed and dictatorial state”.

The Scottish National Party, which is not itself without sin when it comes to the clandestine way they run the devolved Scottish Government,  have attacked the MoD’s secrecy as “absolutely untenable”.

The idea that withholding information would keep the UK safe was “a very dangerous delusion”, the party argued.

The MoD, however, however have insisted that nuclear information has to be protected “for reasons of national security”. The defence nuclear programme was “fully accountable” to ministers, it said.

Annual reports by the MoD’s internal watchdog, the Defence Nuclear Safety Regulator (DNSR), were published for ten years under freedom of information law. But this ceased in 2017.

The Ferret revealed that the reports for 2005 to 2015 highlighted “regulatory risks” 86 times, including 13 rated as high priority. One issue repeatedly seen as a high risk was a growing shortage of suitably qualified and experienced nuclear engineers. 

THE FULL STORY IS ON THE FERRET WEBSITE.

One comment

  1. Ever wondered why there have been clusters, of unusual cancers around the west coast of Scotland.

    Or why there have been high levels of tritium detected on West Coast waters.

    Suspicions of the authorities suppressing any link to the subs abound. And why do you think the Clyde submarine base was out where it was – as far away from London as possible.

    Ditto Sellafield and Dounreay.

    Don’t wonder to hard. You should know the answer.

    When a new, multi billion pound submarine can run aground on Skye I think you can take it that there’s a lot we’re not told.

    And of course the devolutionist SNP don’t ask. Say one thing, do another.

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